A Second Passport in the Sun: How Scandinavian Buyers Read Turkey's 2026 Citizenship-by-Property Rules

For Nordic buyers, a place in the Turkish sun and a second passport can be the same decision. Here is how the 2026 citizenship-by-property rules read from a Scandinavian point of view, with the figures, the holding period, and the cautions that matter.

Jun 14, 2026

Jun 14, 20266 min read

For many buyers from Norway, Sweden, and Denmark, the first reason to look at Turkey is simple: light, warmth, and a coastline that stays usable long after the Nordic season has closed. The second reason tends to arrive later, once the holiday home starts to feel like a base rather than a getaway. That is the point where the conversation shifts from square metres to something larger, a Turkish passport held alongside the one already in the drawer.

This piece looks at Turkey's 2026 citizenship-by-property rules through a specifically Scandinavian lens. The legal facts are the same for everyone. What differs is the starting position: Nordic passport holders already travel widely, value family planning, and tend to read official rules closely before they commit. The questions they ask are not "can I qualify" so much as "does this fit the way we already live".

The lifestyle case comes first, the passport follows

A Turkish property bought for citizenship is still, on day one, a property you have to want to own. The route only works above a clear line: the minimum qualifying real estate value is USD 400,000, or the equivalent in foreign currency. That figure is not the price you negotiate with the seller. It is the value confirmed by an official, government-authorized valuation report, assessed in US dollars at Central Bank rates. Because exchange rates move, buyers commonly target a value a little above the threshold as a buffer rather than sitting exactly on the number.

For a Nordic household, that price band overlaps neatly with the kind of home they would choose anyway: a well-built coastal apartment or a family-sized property near the sea. The investment requirement and the lifestyle requirement point at the same shortlist, which is part of why the route appeals.

What a Scandinavian family actually gets

Two features tend to matter most to Nordic buyers who still work, study, or keep strong ties at home. First, there is no minimum physical-stay requirement and no Turkish language test to obtain citizenship through investment. You do not have to relocate, and you do not have to pass an exam, which suits people who plan to split their year rather than emigrate outright.

Second, Turkey permits dual citizenship. Most investors keep their existing passport. Whether you personally can hold both depends on the rules of your home country, and Nordic nationality law is its own subject, so that question should be checked independently before you rely on it.

Family reach is the other draw. The investor's spouse and children under the age of 18 are included in the same application, with no additional investment required. Adult children and other relatives are generally not covered and would need a separate basis, so households with older teenagers should confirm eligibility for dependents with a lawyer before assuming everyone is in.

The mobility angle, framed honestly

The second-passport conversation usually turns to travel. A Turkish passport provides visa-free or visa-on-arrival access to roughly 110 to 130 countries, with sources commonly citing a figure around 120 to 126 depending on the index used. That is a meaningful spread of access, though it is not the headline a Nordic passport holder is chasing, since Scandinavian passports already rank among the strongest in the world.

The Turkish passport is better read as a complementary document: a different network of access, a foothold between Europe and Asia, and a fallback that broadens a family's options rather than replacing what they already hold. Framed that way, the mobility benefit is real without being oversold.

The 2026 rules at a glance

RequirementDetail
Minimum property valueUSD 400,000 (confirmed by official valuation report)
Holding period3 years, with non-sale annotation on the title deed
Valuation ruleGovernment-authorized SPK appraisal; assessed in USD at Central Bank rates
Currency conversionFunds converted to Turkish Lira via authorized bank; DAB certificate issued
Family includedSpouse and children under 18 (no extra investment)
Stay / languageNo minimum stay, no language test required
Dual citizenshipAllowed (subject to home country rules)
Alternative routesUSD 500,000 (bank deposit, bonds, fixed capital, funds) or 50 jobs
Estimated timelineRoughly 3-12 months (varies; verify current processing)

The commitment a careful buyer should weigh

The holding period is the part Nordic buyers tend to study hardest, because they like to know the exit before the entry. Qualifying real estate must be held for at least three years. A non-sale annotation, a resale restriction, is recorded on the title deed (Tapu) at the Land Registry, and it legally prevents a sale during that window. In plain terms, the home is not a quick trade; it is a three-year commitment at minimum, which fits a household using it seasonally far better than one looking to flip.

The money trail matters too. Investment funds in foreign currency are converted to Turkish Lira through an authorized Turkish bank, evidenced by a Foreign Exchange Purchase Certificate, the DAB. Keeping that paperwork clean from the start avoids friction later in the file.

How the process runs, in order

The sequence is consistent across sources, even where exact timing is not. A careful buyer engages an independent, licensed Turkish lawyer and runs due diligence on the property and its title, rather than relying solely on the seller's agents. They select an eligible property and obtain the government-authorized SPK valuation confirming a value of at least USD 400,000. Funds are transferred and converted to Lira through an authorized bank, producing the DAB. The title deed transfer is completed at the Land Registry with the three-year non-sale annotation registered against it.

From there, the investor obtains the Certificate of Conformity (Uygunluk Belgesi) confirming the investment meets the rules, applies for the investor short-term residence permit, and then submits the citizenship application for the investor and included family members. Final approval comes by Presidential decision, after which Turkish ID and passports are issued.

Reported end-to-end timelines vary widely, from around three to six months up to roughly eight to twelve months in some accounts, so any single figure should be treated as an estimate that depends on due diligence and current processing loads.

A word on precision

The figures above, the USD 400,000 threshold, the three-year hold, the family inclusion, are the parts that are well corroborated. Exact government fees, incidental costs, specific legal article numbers, and current processing times are the parts most likely to drift, and they were not asserted here precisely for that reason. The threshold itself moved once already: it was raised from USD 250,000 to USD 400,000 by an amendment published on 13 May 2022, effective 13 June 2022, which is why older guides quoting the lower figure are out of date.

For a Scandinavian buyer, the practical takeaway is the one you would apply to any major purchase at home: enjoy the lifestyle reasons, respect the three-year commitment, and verify every nuanced or recently changed rule with a licensed Turkish lawyer before you sign.

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